Example sentences of "coming [adv prt] the [noun] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Someone had called an ambulance , and it must be coming down the service road now .
2 Certainly a Glory was coming down the factory drive .
3 erm And the cultivators coming down the logging roads , I agree entirely .
4 You were coming down the Pheasant pub then were you ?
5 They then progressed to half-pass ; coming up the centre line and then performing half-pass towards E. Jennie told Katharine to keep her inside leg on the girth , as the horse should bend in the direction of the movement , as opposed to leg-yielding where the horse keeps in a straight line .
6 A stolen refrigerated truck drives the wrong way up the autobahn — that was seen by a driver coming up the northbound lane — and Tweed 's Mercedes was somewhere not far ahead .
7 I believe I had the same two horses in that wagon ; and I was coming up the Bungay road past Mr Charlie Skinner 's , and the yardman let them cows out to water , d'ye see , like they allus do every morning after they had milking done .
8 His mother was a little surprised to see him coming up the garden path crying his eyes out just half an hour later .
9 But this caused Aboyeur to veer away from the rails and collide with Craganour , carrying him out towards the centre of the course and interfering with the finishing runs of Nimbus — who had been far enough back at Tattenham Corner for his jockey to have seen the suffragette incident — and Great Sport , both coming up the stands side .
10 He shook his head angrily , and heard a clatter of feet behind , coming up the catwalk stairs .
11 Yeah but it must be coming up the Daisy Hill .
12 I still like those wedding ones , with them coming out the church flying
13 I could 've come earlier cos I 've been over Tracey 's since quarter past one , as I was coming out the Jehovah Witnesses were coming out
14 I did n't expect to see her coming out the side door like that . ’
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